Authorizing (or not) your USB devices to connect to the system (C) 2007 Inaky Perez-Gonzalez <inaky@linux.intel.com> Intel Corporation This feature allows you to control if a USB device can be used (or not) in a system. This feature will allow you to implement a lock-down of USB devices, fully controlled by user space. As of now, when a USB device is connected it is configured and its interfaces are immediately made available to the users. With this modification, only if root authorizes the device to be configured will then it be possible to use it. Usage: Authorize a device to connect: $ echo 1 > /sys/usb/devices/DEVICE/authorized Deauthorize a device: $ echo 0 > /sys/usb/devices/DEVICE/authorized Set new devices connected to hostX to be deauthorized by default (ie: lock down): $ echo 0 > /sys/bus/devices/usbX/authorized_default Remove the lock down: $ echo 1 > /sys/bus/devices/usbX/authorized_default By default, Wired USB devices are authorized by default to connect. Wireless USB hosts deauthorize by default all new connected devices (this is so because we need to do an authentication phase before authorizing). Example system lockdown (lame) ----------------------- Imagine you want to implement a lockdown so only devices of type XYZ can be connected (for example, it is a kiosk machine with a visible USB port): boot up rc.local -> for host in /sys/bus/devices/usb* do echo 0 > $host/authorized_default done Hookup an script to udev, for new USB devices if device_is_my_type $DEV then echo 1 > $device_path/authorized done Now, device_is_my_type() is where the juice for a lockdown is. Just checking if the class, type and protocol match something is the worse security verification you can make (or the best, for someone willing to break it). If you need something secure, use crypto and Certificate Authentication or stuff like that. Something simple for an storage key could be: function device_is_my_type() { echo 1 > authorized # temporarily authorize it # FIXME: make sure none can mount it mount DEVICENODE /mntpoint sum=$(md5sum /mntpoint/.signature) if [ $sum = $(cat /etc/lockdown/keysum) ] then echo "We are good, connected" umount /mntpoint # Other stuff so others can use it else echo 0 > authorized fi } Of course, this is lame, you'd want to do a real certificate verification stuff with PKI, so you don't depend on a shared secret, etc, but you get the idea. Anybody with access to a device gadget kit can fake descriptors and device info. Don't trust that. You are welcome.